Part Five: The Witness Grows Up
Fifteen years passed like smoke through fingers.
Laura Williams, now twenty-three, stood outside the glass skyscraper that Ethan had once called his fortress.
She no longer wore a pink hoodie.
Her black cashmere coat billowed in the winter wind. Her hair was pulled back in a severe bun, revealing the sharp angles of a face that had traded childhood softness for surgical precision.
She was the youngest attending trauma surgeon at New York-Presbyterian Hospital.
The city knew her name now. Not because of Ethan’s money, but because she had rebuilt it with her own two hands.
She had spent four years in medical school, another five in residency, and every single day of it proving that she was not a charity case.
She was a weapon.
Her phone buzzed.
A text from an unknown number: He’s asking for you. By name.
Laura didn’t respond.
She hadn’t spoken to Ethan Young in seven years.
Not since the night of her high school graduation, when he had pulled her aside and told her that he was stepping back. That she needed to become her own woman without his shadow.
“You have outgrown me, Laura,” he had said, his voice steady but his eyes betraying something that looked like grief. “Go. Become what you were meant to be. And forget you ever knew a man like me.”
She had tried.
God knows she had tried.
But every time she closed her eyes, she saw the dragon tattoos. The charcoal blue suit. The way he had knelt down to look her in the eye on that tarmac.
The way he had loved her like a daughter and then let her go.
Another buzz.
He won’t say what’s wrong. But he’s locked himself in the penthouse. He told his guards to stay back. He told us to call you.
Laura’s gloved hand tightened around her phone.
She looked up at the skyscraper.
The top floor windows were dark.
That was wrong.
Ethan never sat in the dark.